310 likes | 799 Views
Objective Setting and Budgeting. Chapter Objectives. After reading this chapter you should be able to : Understand the process of marcom objective setting and the requirements for good objectives.
E N D
Chapter Objectives After reading this chapter you should be able to: • Understand the process of marcomobjective setting and the requirements for good objectives. • Appreciate the hierarchy-of-marcom effects model and its relevance for setting marcomobjectives. • Discuss the Integrated Information Response Model and how it helps determine the integration of advertising and direct product experience under different levels of involvement. • Comprehend the role of sales as a marcomobjective and the logic of vaguely right versus precisely wrong thinking. • Know the relationship between a brand’s share of market (SOM) and its share of voice (SOV) and the implications for setting an advertising budget. • Understand the various rules of thumb, or heuristics, that guide practical budgeting.
Why Setting Marcom (Advertising) Objectives Is Important • Expression of management consensus • Guides the budgeting, message, and media aspects of advertising strategy • Provide standards against with results can be measured
Marcom (Advertising) Objectives Several categories of marcom (advertising) objectives that can guide strategy * The “what” arguably is the most difficult objective.
Hierarchy of Effects Models • Hierarchy of Effects Orderings: • Traditional Learning Hierarchy (high involvement): • Cognition → Affect → Conation • Low Involvement Hierarchy: • Minimal Cognition → Conation → Affect
Figure 8.1: The Hierarchy of Marcom Effects The hierarchy of effectsmetaphor implies that for marketing communications to be successful it must move consumers from one goal to the next goal.
Figure 8.2: An Advertisement IllustratingHierarchy of Marcom Effects by Creating Expectations
Questions/Issues from the Hierarchy Model • Which comes first, attitude or behavior? • Which is more important, advertised informationorpersonal experience? • Is brand loyalty guaranteed? • What are the implications for objective setting (e.g., awareness, expectations, trial, reinforce beliefs, ...)?
Fig. 8.3: Integrated Information Response Model (Smith and Swinyard 1982 Journal of Marketing)
Figure 8.4: Setting Good Marcom (Advertising) Objectives • Include a precise statement of who, what, and when • Be quantitative and measurable • Specify the amount of change • Be realistic • Be internally consistent • Be clear and put it in writing
Sales (Direct) Objectives mean the marcom objective literally is to increase sales by a particular amount. Should Marcom Objectives Be Stated in Terms of Sales? Communications (Indirect) Objectives attempt to increase the target audience’s brand awareness, enhance their attitudes toward the brand, shift their preferences from the competitors’ brand and so on.
Situations in which Sales (Direct) Objectives May Be Appropriate • Advertising by retailers • Direct-response advertising • Sales promotion advertising • Business-to-business advertising • Also: Where is the Target Market in the Stages of the Decision-making Process? • Problem recognition • Search • Evaluation • Choice • Outcomes
Should Marcom Objectives Be Stated in Terms of Sales? • Traditional View (Thesis) • Sales volume is the consequence of a host of factors in addition to marcom • Effect of marcom efforts is delayed
Sales Volume as a Marcom Objective • Heretical View (Antithesis) • Marcom’s purpose is to generate sales • Sales measures are “vaguely right”
One View: “The Logic of Vaguely Right Vs. Precisely Wrong Thinking” Vaguely Right Choice of Objective Issue Measurement Accuracy Issue Versus Precisely Wrong
Practical Budgeting Methods • Percent-of-Sales Budgeting • Objective-and-Task Method • Competitive Parity Method (match competitors’ method) • Affordability Method